The Official Tennis Thread

Started by Doogie Browser, January 26, 2010, 11:25:28 AM

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Mikhail Prokhorov


Estimator

Quote from: Estimator on June 13, 2021, 04:02:09 PM
Tsitsipas two sets up. Hard to see Novak pulling it back the way he is playing.
Looks like I got that wrong.
Ulster League Champions 2009

Rich Ricci

Nadal has always been my favourite but you can't do anything but applaud and admire Djokovic. He's superhuman and just doesn't know when he's beaten. I'd be shocked if it's not the same outcome at Wimbledon.

Nanderson

Novak could do all 4 slams and an Olympic title in 1 year. Novak seems to love playing the pantomime villian. The crowd was rooting for Tsitsipas to get him over the line but the more they cheered the more Novak raised his game a la Wimbledon final against Fed in 2019. Once he found his range with the drop shots he started cleaning up at the net   

Milltown Row2

Some ejjit from a village in Tyrone is having a shit weekend
None of us are getting out of here alive, so please stop treating yourself like an after thought. Ea

nrico2006

Djokovic will set the grand slam record, which could be as high as 24/25 by the time he finishes.
'To the extreme I rock a mic like a vandal, light up a stage and wax a chump like a candle.'

StPatsAbu

Quote from: nrico2006 on June 13, 2021, 09:24:30 PM
Djokovic will set the grand slam record, which could be as high as 24/25 by the time he finishes.

They said that about Tiger Woods and majors!   :o Fate is a great leveller!

Milltown Row2

None of us are getting out of here alive, so please stop treating yourself like an after thought. Ea

Estimator

Top 3 now on 20 slams each.
Novak on course for the calendar golden slam.
Ulster League Champions 2009

TabClear

New Brit star having an incredible run

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2021/sep/09/emma-raducanu-maria-sakkari-leylah-annie-fernandez-us-open-tennis-semi-final

Going to be some final between a 18 year old and a19 year old.

When Emma Raducanu arrived at Flushing Meadows this year, she did not have the faintest idea of where to go. So unfamiliar was she with her surroundings, she needed help from her fellow players just to navigate the tournament's vast grounds.

Her growth over the past three weeks since those timid first steps has been astounding as she outplayed everyone put in front of her. And under the lights of the Arthur Ashe Stadium on Thursday night she went even further, producing yet another brilliant performance to reach her first grand slam final.

Faced with a moment she has been dreaming of her entire life, Raducanu handled the occasion with the remarkable composure that has defined her rise as she outclassed Maria Sakkari, the Greek 17th seed, 6-1, 6-4.

In doing so, Raducanu became the first qualifier, man or woman, to reach a grand slam final in the Open era and the first British woman to reach a grand slam final since Virginia Wade's triumph at Wimbledon in 1977. At the age of 18, Raducanu is now one step from the ultimate achievement in her sport.

"Honestly, the time here in New York has gone so fast," she said after the match. "I've just been taking care of each day and, before you know it, I'm in the final and I can't believe it."

Emma Raducanu
Emma Raducanu's US Open heroics inspire young British players
Read more
She will face another teenager, 19 year-old Leylah Annie Fernandez, after the Canadian extended her own astonishing run by scuppering the second seed, Aryna Sabalenka, 7-6 (3), 4-6, 6-4. Together the two players, who last faced each other at junior Wimbledon in 2018, will contest the first grand slam final between teenagers since Serena Williams and Martina Hingis met at the 1999 US Open.

Standing between Raducanu and the final was one of the biggest servers and most athletic players on tour. Sakkari had unfinished business when she stepped on court: at Roland Garros this year, in her first-ever grand slam semi-final, she had faltered when she held match point against Barbora Krejcikova.

Sakkari's drive was obvious at the start of the match. Over the first two games, Raducanu faced seven break points but she demonstrated her toughness by saving them all, and broke for good measure to lead 3-0. As Sakkari struggled to find her level, Raducanu grew. She seemed to occupy every part of the court, neutralising Sakkari's weight of shot with her movement and effortlessly flipped from defence to offence. Sakkari sprayed unforced errors and found herself 5-0 down before Raducanu tidily closed off the first set.

Sakkari opened the second with far greater energy, slamming down a quick hold. But while the Greek player was untouchable on her serve against Karolina Pliskova in the previous round, Raducanu handled Sakkari's biggest weapon by landing difficult returns at her feet. In Sakkari's second service game of the set, Raducanu laid waste to the Greek's serve, pressuring her first serve and attacking her second to break.

The Briton then held serve with an ace and soon found herself up 6-1, 3-1 with double break point. But after Raducanu overhit a forehand and shanked another, Sakkari held serve and the tension rose as the Greek marched around the court determined to recover.

How did Raducanu respond? She served brilliantly as she held to love for 4-2, snapping a backhand down the line on game point. Although Sakkari finally settled into her own service game, Raducanu came out at 5-4 and served out her first grand slam semi-final with ease.

And so this unprecedented journey, which began in the qualifying rounds in the heat of August, goes on. Raducanu is already up to 31st in the live rankings, meaning she has put herself in position to be seeded at the Australian Open after starting the summer as the world No 366 and playing just four tour-level tournaments. Across her nine matches since the qualifying draw, she has yet to drop a set.

Given how sparse her resume is, it would have been perfectly understandable for her to have stumbled over the past week. But she does not care. She is here to take her journey match-by-match, and she has arrived at each one with unwavering belief that she can beat the opponent across the net. Each time she has.

"Is there any expectation? I'm a qualifier so technically, on paper, there's nothing. No pressure on me," said Raducanu on court after her victory.

That youthful fearlessness has, of course, been the defining trend of the US Open. Fernandez had arrived at the tournament ranked 73rd and in indifferent form yet after upsetting Naomi Osaka, the defending champion and third seed, in the third round, she followed it with wins over former champion Angelique Kerber, No 5 seed Elina Svitolina and then Sabalenka.

With her victory, Fernandez became the youngest woman to reach a grand slam final since Maria Sharapova at Wimbledon in 2004. Less than two hours later, Raducanu took the record for herself.

Rich Ricci

Yeah she's doing brilliantly and is absolutely demolishing her opponents. Yet to drop a set.

Djokovic plays Zverev in the men's semi tonight which has the potential to be a cracker.

Estimator

Raducanu wins the first set 6-4.
Ulster League Champions 2009

Nanderson

Quote from: Estimator on September 11, 2021, 10:25:24 PM
Raducanu wins the first set 6-4.
I've never seen a womens player with such an aggressive game

Tony Baloney

That may be the first time I've wanted a Brit to win! Unreal stuff.

Rich Ricci

Fantastic stuff. To go through the qualifiers without dropping a set really is amazing.